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Dave Schrader

Started by NowhereInTime, March 16, 2013, 06:20:57 PM

Quote from: Gd5150 on February 12, 2018, 01:33:22 AM
Just turned it on. Needed something live. Not bad so far. Paranormal foo.


Enjoying it particularly the guest talking about Gettysburg.

Gd5150

The story about the generals having the band play music at night to drown out the cries of the wounded soldiers stuck on the battlefield so the healthy could soldiers sleep. Absolutely brutal.

Quote from: Gd5150 on February 12, 2018, 03:38:05 AM
The story about the generals having the band play music at night to drown out the cries of the wounded soldiers stuck on the battlefield so the healthy could soldiers sleep. Absolutely brutal.

The Army hospitals had to be a nightmare to the doctors and everyone involved. Sawing off limbs left and right and all the death from gangrene and such must have been a nightmare. I'm very thankful that I live in these relatively peaceful times.

Really enjoyed Richard Estep.  He seemed to have the proper respect for all of the fallen in the Civil War.  For good or ill, it is part of the past and it should never be covered up.

Jojo

Geez no trigger warnings in this thread!

Dr. MD MD

Quote from: 21st Century Man on February 12, 2018, 03:48:48 AM
The Army hospitals had to be a nightmare to the doctors and everyone involved. Sawing off limbs left and right and all the death from gangrene and such must have been a nightmare. I'm very thankful that I live in these relatively peaceful times.

Savages! Barbarians!



Up All Night

Quote from: 21st Century Man on February 12, 2018, 04:01:17 AM
Really enjoyed Richard Estep.  He seemed to have the proper respect for all of the fallen in the Civil War.  For good or ill, it is part of the past and it should never be covered up.

When it came time to sing, the pastor instructed the choir and the congregation to sing a little louder to drown out the wailing prisoners. That scene took place in Nazi Germany in 1943. A train carrying a load of Jewish prisoners to a concentration camp had broken down outside a small Christian church.

I'll feel better when they someday document in detail the suffering and the tragedy of the Trail of Tears, "our" 'Philippines' Death March...

ItsOver

Quote from: 21st Century Man on February 12, 2018, 02:40:13 AM

Enjoying it particularly the guest talking about Gettysburg.
I wish the that guest had been first.  The first guest just seemed to be shooting the shit with Schrader and they did a great job of putting me to sleep after the first hour.

Quote from: Up All Night on February 12, 2018, 05:27:56 AM
When it came time to sing, the pastor instructed the choir and the congregation to sing a little louder to drown out the wailing prisoners. That scene took place in Nazi Germany in 1943. A train carrying a load of Jewish prisoners to a concentration camp had broken down outside a small Christian church.

I'll feel better when they someday document in detail the suffering and the tragedy of the Trail of Tears, "our" 'Philippines' Death March...

Some people on this site love Andrew Jackson but his legacy will always be tainted by the way he double-crossed the Cherokee.

I keep hoping Schrader's beyond the Darkness will get better. It just isn't. There will be the occasional good show but a lot of bad/old/re-hashed guest. It is also really short. I miss true crime Tuesdays which now is a paid show. They run an old Darkness radio show on Tuesdays for they Beyond the darkness show.

Quote from: nooryisawesome on February 13, 2018, 04:24:08 PM
I keep hoping Schrader's beyond the Darkness will get better. It just isn't. There will be the occasional good show but a lot of bad/old/re-hashed guest. It is also really short. I miss true crime Tuesdays which now is a paid show. They run an old Darkness radio show on Tuesdays for they Beyond the darkness show.

Yeah, there have been a lot of rather lackluster paranormal programs.  The only one I listened to during the past 2 weeks was the Ron Feyl exorcist program.  That was basically a rehash too but I was intrigued how he described a case where a petite female turned into a muscular male during a possession. 

It really seems that there have not been any really good haunting stories in a while and those are the ones I'm interested in.  Guests are usually investigators who talk about the paranormal in general terms and not specific cases.  I like to hear stories from the people who are actually experiencing hauntings.

Quote from: 21st Century Man on February 13, 2018, 04:41:38 PM
Yeah, there have been a lot of rather lackluster paranormal programs.  The only one I listened to during the past 2 weeks was the Ron Feyl exorcist program.  That was basically a rehash too but I was intrigued how he described a case where a petite female turned into a muscular male during a possession. 

It really seems that there have not been any really good haunting stories in a while and those are the ones I'm interested in.  Guests are usually investigators who talk about the paranormal in general terms and not specific cases.  I like to hear stories from the people who are actually experiencing hauntings.

There are a lot of good Ghost tour operators across the country. Why these sort of shows don't have more of them on I'll never know. Instead its the same tired ghost stories we have all heard from the same people. I agree its better to have the actual person than investigators but they could at least get someone with new stories. Schrader at least on occasion does this, Noory does not. Noory is content with running out the same rotation, which is reason 483 Noory sucks.

DaveSchrader

Quote from: nooryisawesome on February 13, 2018, 04:24:08 PM
I keep hoping Schrader's beyond the Darkness will get better. It just isn't. There will be the occasional good show but a lot of bad/old/re-hashed guest. It is also really short. I miss true crime Tuesdays which now is a paid show. They run an old Darkness radio show on Tuesdays for they Beyond the darkness show.

On rare occasion we will run a rerun, but most of the time it was all new every week. There was no specific day of the week we would plug in a rerun.  So you are giving incorrect facts regarding that.

The funny thing about the length of the shows is this, when you remove all the ads we used to have on on terrestrial station you got roughly 42 mins of content per hour, our new show segments are usually an hour to 90 mins. Depending on the topic and the guest. Where we were tied to filling the entire program before we can now boil down the show and if and when the guest or topic begins to wane, we can end the show. 

Some people complain the old shows dragged on because of our time commitments, those are the same people complaining now that BEYOND the DARKNESS is too short.  Would you prefer I keep an interview going once it has gone past a sense of interesting information to share?

We do revisit with certain guests, that is because we get emailed requests to have those guests back, or to explore a topic a bit more deeply.  In some cases it is revisiting a guest on a topic because the old interviews no longer exist and people want to hear them, so we invite the guest back to cover the old info and any new updates that they may have.

I am sorry you feel the show has slipped, we are adapting to changes that we had to make. Our show still sustains over 100,000 downloads per episode some as high as 200,000 depending on the topic or guest.  As far as podcasts go, that is still considered a successful show. 

Not every topic is going to illicit the same kind of excitement from everyone, it is a variety program in the sense we try to mix the topics as best we can to incorporate as many interests of the listeners as we can.  We also watch trends, if people are more interested in Ghosts we do more ghosts, if the Cryptids are hitting big we work those in, same with UFO/Alien. 

We really only took calls once a week on Mondays, and most listeners complained that people dragged on and were bad story tellers, so with the changes made we eliminated the major complaints of LIVE callers that go off track or may be weak at conveying their stories and opt to read the stories they send in.

Hopefully that gives you a bit of insight into the hows and whys of our new format with Darkness Radio Presents: BEYOND the DARKNESS on PodcastOne.

Dave

Quote from: DaveSchrader on March 02, 2018, 11:20:23 AM
On rare occasion we will run a rerun, but most of the time it was all new every week. There was no specific day of the week we would plug in a rerun.  So you are giving incorrect facts regarding that.

The funny thing about the length of the shows is this, when you remove all the ads we used to have on on terrestrial station you got roughly 42 mins of content per hour, our new show segments are usually an hour to 90 mins. Depending on the topic and the guest. Where we were tied to filling the entire program before we can now boil down the show and if and when the guest or topic begins to wane, we can end the show. 

Some people complain the old shows dragged on because of our time commitments, those are the same people complaining now that BEYOND the DARKNESS is too short.  Would you prefer I keep an interview going once it has gone past a sense of interesting information to share?

We do revisit with certain guests, that is because we get emailed requests to have those guests back, or to explore a topic a bit more deeply.  In some cases it is revisiting a guest on a topic because the old interviews no longer exist and people want to hear them, so we invite the guest back to cover the old info and any new updates that they may have.

I am sorry you feel the show has slipped, we are adapting to changes that we had to make. Our show still sustains over 100,000 downloads per episode some as high as 200,000 depending on the topic or guest.  As far as podcasts go, that is still considered a successful show. 

Not every topic is going to illicit the same kind of excitement from everyone, it is a variety program in the sense we try to mix the topics as best we can to incorporate as many interests of the listeners as we can.  We also watch trends, if people are more interested in Ghosts we do more ghosts, if the Cryptids are hitting big we work those in, same with UFO/Alien. 

We really only took calls once a week on Mondays, and most listeners complained that people dragged on and were bad story tellers, so with the changes made we eliminated the major complaints of LIVE callers that go off track or may be weak at conveying their stories and opt to read the stories they send in.

Hopefully that gives you a bit of insight into the hows and whys of our new format with Darkness Radio Presents: BEYOND the DARKNESS on PodcastOne.

Dave

Thanks for your insights, Dave.

ItsOver

Quote from: 21st Century Man on March 02, 2018, 12:40:09 PM
Thanks for your insights, Dave.
Dave Schrader.  Still better than a Clinton presidency Jorch show.

Quote from: Jojo on February 12, 2018, 04:08:40 AM
Geez no trigger warnings in this thread!
====================================================
'Allo!
Noteing to-night's book by hack writer Mr.Redfearn:
Here's an 'trigger'warning,via REVIEW:
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
In 2009 a man named Eric Knudsen created photo art of a thin, mysterious supernatural man in a suit, and he posted these photo illustrations to Something Awful, where they became the fodder for countless online stories of a creature soon known as Slender Man, sometimes stylized as Slenderman. In this, it was not entirely different from the fictitious Blair Witch of 1999, or the Cthulhu Mythos of H. P. Lovecraft’s fiction. In each case, a fictitious creation came to be embraced as “real” by fans who should have known better. The story of Slender Man is important, however, because in 2014 two 12-year-old girls lured a third into the woods in Waukesha, Wisconsin and stabbed her 19 times in an effort to impress the Slender Man. The victim survived, but the perpetrators were found not guilty by reason of insanity. Each was sentenced to decades in a mental health facility. The incident undercuts the collective “fun” to be had from pretending a fictitious thing was real.
​This dark chapter in the otherwise mostly unremarkable history of the Slender Man character hangs over Nick Redfern’s new book, The Slenderman Mysteries (New Page, 2018), and it cuts against his usual tone of slightly uninterested good humor. Redfern dutifully but briefly reports the story in his introduction before reveling rather obscenely in its gory details in chapter 6 and letting the story shape the second half of the book in unsettling ways. Here, though, he merely calls it “extremely disturbing,” and lets the incident pass mostly as a curiosity on the road to the “fun,” which for him is the question of whether Slender Man, like the incorporeal thought entities called egregores in Victorian magician Éliphas Lévi’s (fake) occult mythology, is really some sort of sentience called into being from human desire, the internet’s growing consciousness, or a supernatural realm:

    ​More and more people are following, and arguably even worshiping and devoting their lives to, the Slenderman as he becomes ever stronger and more physical in our world. Where did he come from? What does he want from us? What are the many witnesses to the Slenderman telling us? Is there just one creature, or are we looking at multiple Slendermen? How can we stop him from terrorizing and torturing us? Can we stop him? Or has he become an unstoppable, unbeatable nightmare?

Picture
These questions are inappropriate, both because the fiction has had terrible real-world consequences and because by any objective measure the Slender Man has no physical reality, and no will or desire. To lay the issue out at the most basic level, the Slender Man’s influence is no different than, say, an Islamic State suicide bombing manual. The Islamic State may have goals and desires, but the manual does not, even though its readers are inspired to kill from reading it. The manual is just a piece of media; it did not make them do it, nor does it have any independent power of action beyond that of the authors who wrote it and the readers who consume it. Slender Man is little different, except that he has a vaguely anthropoid form, which allows his consumers to attribute to him motives and desires that simply are not there.

This is why Redfern’s first chapter, tracing the well-established chronology of the Slender Man’s early history, from the first photo illustrations to the earliest fiction written about him. But near the end of this chronology, Redfern notes than in November 2009, irresponsible Coast to Coast AM host George Noory (a colleague of Redfern’s on Ancient Aliens) played host to a number of callers who claimed to have encountered the Slender Man. But Redfern is uninterested in establishing the truth of these claims, perhaps because Coast to Coast is such an important station of the cross on the fringe publishing circuit:

    Some might suggest that the people who phoned in to Coast to Coast AM were hoaxers. Maybe they were, maybe they weren't. But it doesn't really matter. If enough of the Coast to Coast AM audience believed what they were hearing, then that collective and combined belief would have gone a significant way toward ensuring that the Tulpa version of the Slenderman would soon be up and running.

​A tulpa? Yes, of course. The author has a habit of dropping in people and concepts without explanation before reversing course at a later point and circling back to explain them. Redfern devotes the next chapter to discussing the term, which he introduces at first as a Buddhist concept. The tulpa as we know it today, and as he is using it, is a theosophical concept from the 1920sâ€"not even a century old!â€"in which thoughts can manifest in forms that influence the physical world. It is a garbling of the Tibetan Buddhist concept of sprulpa and/or tulku, whereby celestial beings and some humans can create astral bodies or spiritual manifestations. Theosophists applied this to the generation of three types of “thought-form,” an astral projection of the thinker, the embodiment of a spirit or deceased soul, or the manifestation of an emotion. But Hollywood misunderstood even this, and episodes of shows like The X-Files (“Arcadia,” Mar. 7, 1999 and “Home Again,” Feb. 8, 2016) and Supernatural (“Hell House,” Mar. 30, 2006 and “#thinman, Mar. 4, 2016) expanded the tulpa concept to include the involuntary manifestation of a monstrous being, basically by necromancy.

In the case of Supernatural’s “Hell House,” which is most directly relevant here, the imaginary action involved a fake internet legend of the fictitious killer Mordechai Murdoch coming to life as a ghostlike and violent monster simply because enough people believed in him, and some magic squiggles were painted on the walls, since in the show’s world symbols have power regardless of whether the writer understands them. While Supernatural did not invent the claim of involuntary tulpa creation--authors as diverse as Sylvia Browne and Michael Grosso used it in the 1990s and early 2000s, though not with the mass media angle--it surely popularized it.  Here, Sam and Dean Winchester, the monster hunters, discuss tulpas:

    Sam: So there was an incident in Tibet in 1950. A group of monks visualized a golem in their heads, then meditate on it so hard, they bring the thing to life out of thin air.
     
    Dean: So?
     
    Sam: That was 20 monks. Imagine what 10,000 web surfers can do. I mean, Craig starts the story about Mordechai, then it spreads, it goes online. Now there are countless people all believing in the bastard.
     
    […]
     
    Sam: That’s a Tibetan spirit sigil. On the wall of the house. Craig said they were painting symbols from a theology textbook. I bet they painted this, not even knowing what it was. Now that sigil has been used for centuries, concentrating meditative thoughts like a magnifying glass. So people are on the HellHounds website, staring at the symbol, thinking about Mordechai ... I mean I don’t know, but it might be enough to bring a tulpa to life.

​Compare this to Redfern’s words alleging that a May 2014 Coast to Coast AM broadcast mentioning Slenderman was responsible for the stabbing that occurred a few hours after the show ended:

    That Coast to Coast AM has such a phenomenally massive number of listeners may also have had a bearing on how and why the Slenderman controversy reached its terrible peak only a handful of hours after the show aired. More listeners equals more believers. More believers equals a more powerful, dangerous, and corporeal Slenderman.

​In the current book, Redfern has compressed the entire history of tulpas into an assumption of belief, even though his working thesis of the Slender Man is ripped almost verbatim from “Hell House.” However, in the first half of the book Redfern treats the modern myth of the tulpa as though it is a genuine and ancient form of sorcery, going so far as to say that “All too often they have a disturbing habit of running riot and turning against their creators.” This is less an ancient mystical tradition than a claim made by Alexandra David-Néel, a Belgian-French Buddhist in her 1929 book Magic and Mystery in Tibet, where basically the same claim appears (and which Redfern later quotes): “Once the tulpa is endowed with enough vitality to be capable of playing the part of a real being, it tends to free itself from its maker’s control. … Sometimes the phantom becomes a rebellious son and one hears of uncanny struggles that have taken place between magicians and their creatures…” Tighter editing would have eliminated the redundancy of summarizing and then quoting the same material. Evaluating the accuracy of this report is problematic because there is so little information in English that isn’t written by New Agers. I searched several academic databases and found nothing. It’s interesting, though, that the information David-Néel gives is recounting rollicking legendsâ€"basically ghost storiesâ€"rather than pointing to articles of faith. That said, she claimed to have created her own evil tulpa, which haunted her for a long time. Given that no one else could confirm the existence of this supposedly partially corporeal creature, the most parsimonious explanation is that she had convinced herself of a fantasy. I’m also concerned that her account of the tulpas seems to stand behind every other, with little or no effort to replicate her research. Redfern accepts her claim at face value and suggests that Slender Man is also a creature called into being by internet belief.

Citing Vice.com as his source, Redfern wrongly concludes that the tulpa was largely unknown outside of occult circles until 2009, the same time that Slender Man emerged, a coincidence he sees as significant. However, as we saw, The X-Files and Supernatural had popularized the tulpa--Supernatural more than any otherâ€"among the same internet geeks who birthed Slender Man and who engaged in what Vice.com said was a group effort among 4chan members to create tulpas as imaginary friends. It’s important to note a very important difference: Before Hollywood took over, a tulpa was typically created intentionally through specific magical rituals and for specific purposes. (Redfern very briefly notes this in the conclusion.) Afterward, there was an explosion of books in which a tulpa became any kind of psychic projection, called into being by the will to believe. This seems more of a reflection of the postmodern view of religion as a collective construct (or the common science fiction/fantasy trope that ghosts and gods exist only because of those who believe in them) than a genuine Tibetan tradition.

Redfern tries to support the reality of manifesting spirit beings by citing people who claim to have encountered them. In one case he literally tells us that the encounter took place while the viewer was in a “state of semi-sleep,” making quite clear that the most likely explanation is a waking dream. I’ve had them myself, so I understand how they can seem quite real. Weirdly enough, Redfern later quotes occult researcher Ian Vincent to the effect that the tulpa is a modern, bastardized, misunderstood concept with little connection to Buddhism, but he lets this slide by without comment.

As with much of the Redfern oeuvre, the accounts are presented at face value, with little critical analysis, in service of a thesisâ€"that Slender Man is something like a tulpaâ€"that is stated in the conditional tense (“…may have…” “…might…”) so that the author never quite commits to the thesis, lest he be accused of making a claim his surface-level research can’t support. And yet, the reader is clearly meant to take this suggestion seriously, for as the book progresses, Redfern delves ever deeper into the opinion of occultists that the Slender Man has achieved sentience through the magical power of belief.

He moves away from tulpas to enter into the realm of ceremonial magic, particularly the strain of evidence-free magical thinking that claims H. P. Lovecraft was in subconscious contact with transdimensional supernatural entities and therefore the Cthulhu Mythos was in some sense “real.” This is, of course, the view of Kenneth Grant, but the fact remains that it is rank speculation born of a belief in the power and efficacy of magical rituals, even if Redfern declares chaos magic to be a “very plausible explanation” for how the Slender Man might become real.

Redfern, however, feels that it is highly significant that Grant used Lovecraft for magic, while Slender Man’s creator, Eric Knudsen, claimed to have been partially inspired by the atmosphere of Lovecraftian horror in developing the first Slender Man photo illustrations and their accompanying captions. This is testimony not to channeled power from the spirit world but to the pervasiveness of Lovecraftian fiction among those inclined to the weird. Lovecraft, after all, turned to Éliphas Lévi’s work on the occult and magic in crafting his own tales of dark powers, so there is a perfectly material explanation for how egregores translated from Lévi to both Lovecraft and modern occultists and then to Slender Man, whose creator and advocates drew on both. But for Redfern this is not nearly as good a story as imagining that egregores or tulpas are real.

It is this defiant desire to absolve the actual human proponents of Slender Man’s ersatz mythology of responsibility for their own actions that leads Redfern to some inexcusable efforts to portray the stabbings committed by those preteen girls in Wisconsin as the result of supernatural forces. In the sixth and seventh chapters, Redfern dwells in almost prurient detail on the lives of the girls who stabbed their friend in Slender Man’s name, essentially exploiting the mental illness of the ringleader in order to promote an irresponsible allegation that the girls were involved with a real supernatural entity. The chapters are a condensation of Beware the Slenderman, a 2017 HBO documentary that dealt more seriously with the fallout and important lessons of this crime. Here, though, Redfern strip-mines to documentary for nuggets of sensationalist garbage he can spin into supernatural proof. For example, one girl claimed to have dreamed of Slender Man at the age of three, which was before the character’s creation. Rather than explain that as a child’s fantasy, or a faulty memory of visually similar characters like the Gentlemen from Buffy the Vampire Slayer (1999) or Pale Man from Pan’s Labyrinth (2006), Redfern declares this to be “eye-opening” proof of Slender Man’s reality. He also does his math wrong. The girl was twelve in 2014, so she was three nine years earlier, in 2005 or 2006, not 2000 as Redfern alleges.

This becomes more maddening when Redfern acknowledges similar situations that have occurred in pop culture, such as Pan’s Labyrinth, but calls them “synchronicities” that suggest a supernatural reality rather than, as is much more likely, pop culture drawing on earlier weird and occult literature and in turn influencing those who consume it. Because he doesn’t give this serious consideration, a chapter devoted to scaremongering summaries of various teenagers’ acts of violence and vandalism in the name of Slender Man, violent videogames, and other media products rings both false and exploitative, a moral panic (an important phrase never once appearing in the book) that Redfern accepts as legitimate without interrogating the underlying meanings and motives. These aren’t bonkers money-grubbing adults like the cast of Ancient Aliens whose choices are ripe for exploitation because they chose to exploit themselves; these are disturbed children who ought not to be used to sell supernatural snake oil. When Redfern ends a description of alcoholism and suicide among Native American youths on the Pine Ridge Reservation with the gleeful words “You know whatâ€"or, rather, whoâ€"is coming” before trying to claim Slender Man (or its Native interpretation, Tall Man Spirit) as a cause rather than a symptom of the complex psychological and socioeconomic issues involved, it, frankly, angered me. What makes it worse is that Redfern’s many chapters giving litanies of similar stories are almost entirely summaries of newspaper articles and web chatter, with virtually no original analysisâ€"or even much of a pointâ€"to justify exploiting damaged children. This is merely copy-and-paste rubbernecking.

To his credit, Redfern understands this, though he immediately chooses to discount the objection:

    Blaming such tragic events on the actions of a supernatural entity that we cannot fully prove exists is as reckless as it is, for many, both unbelievable and inappropriate in the extreme. While it’s all too easy to see evil in every corner, more often than not that evil comes from us, not from murderous monsters. Others, though, and particularly those who have encountered the faceless beast close up, might disagree with that particular point of view. Given the sheer fear that such encounters generate, it’s easy to see why some might suggest that the Slenderman has indeed manipulated people to commit violent, murderous attacks. Maybe it has done exactly that.

​Having his cake and eating it, too, Redfern wants credit for recognizing that his book is offensive and exploitative, while still engaging in that offensive exploitation. You can’t have both.

Near the end of the book, Redfern approaches Slender Man ass-backward, looking for older myths and legends that have some similarities to the ersatz story of Slender Man. Instead of understanding that the modern Slender Man fakelore draws on elements of older stories, he wrongly tries to argue that unrelated and largely different myths are actually Slender Man himself. Thus, the incongruity of arguing that the Pied Piper of Hamelin, who had a face and spoke, is also the silent, faceless Slender Man. Similarly, he falls into the trap of backward attribution, collecting ex post facto accounts from Waukesha, Wisconsin of people meeting dark shadows in the woods, Slavic immigrants’ imported tales of the vodyanoy (a frog-monster better known to me as the Polish wodnik), and stories of actual unsolved child murders from the area in order to claim that Slender Man is behind them, implicitly absolving the girls of their actions. Oddly, Redfern is happy to attribute any story, even those of UFO lore, involving tall men in black to Slender Man but seems ignorant of the American Puritan forms of Satan made famous as the Black Man of the woods in Hawthorne’s Scarlet Letter and “Main Street” and in Lovecraft’s fiction. The allusions to the Black Man are, as should be obvious, an influence on the dark, tall, evil figures of pop culture. Perhaps the Black Man is too sophisticated for Redfern’s thesis. Here is Hawthorne describing him in ​The Scarlet Letter: “How he haunts this forest, and carries a book with him, â€" a big, heavy book, with iron clasps; and how this ugly Black Man offers his book and an iron pen to everybody that meets him here among the trees; and they are to write their names with their own blood. And then he sets his mark on their bosoms!” But, really, isn’t that the Slender Man with an analog internet?

Redfern is suitably impressed that some people described “perfectly” (ha!) the Slender Man before its 2009 creation, though by “perfectly” he means three things: tall, wearing a suit or coat, and having no face. This, he feels, is beyond the realm of possibility if Slender Man were not real, since he has apparently forgotten pop culture characters like Charlton Comics’ (now DC’s) The Question (created 1967) or Dick Tracy’s The Blank (created 1937), both of whom answer to the same description.
Picture
The Blank
   
Picture
The Question
   
Picture
Slender Man
The remainder of the book recounts various modern individuals’ alleged encounters with creatures that resemble Slender Man, from the last few years when the meme was well-known. Even Redfern notes that many such encounters occur when the victim is falling asleep, though he discounts the fact that this is the time associated with waking dreams. He also compares the Slender Man to Lovecraft’s night-gaunts, which is strange since those creatures were basically flying stingrays and look nothing like a dark man in a suit hanging out in the woods, which was more Nyarlathotep’s thing. At the most basic level, Redfern is trying to force comparisons into a box that doesn’t quite fit since it is built on the shaky foundation of the Slender Man being the prototype of ancient evil rather than a modern fiction.

The book ends with a series of rhetorical questions designed to leave the reader with the impression that Redfern has said something about the Slender Man, when he has not. It is symptomatic of the failures of the book, which in the end is a superficial collection of other fringe writers’ views wrapped in salacious anecdotes and irresponsible speculation in the form of “just asking questions.” This reaches the heights of ridiculousness when Redfern speculates that Slender Man is actually an Agent Smith figure because we live in a simulated Matrix-like universe. If that is the case, he is a terrible secret agent of the Machines.

The Slenderman Mysteries suffers from the typical weaknesses of a Redfern effort. It is overwritten, with sentences spiced with redundancies and the same ideas repeated more than once. It is chock-a-block with block quotes, many of excessive length, held together with the thinnest of connecting thoughts. It relies nearly exclusively on other fringe books and websites, as well as selectively excerpted magazine and newspaper articles, with hardly a hint of research in scholarly sources. I’m sorry, but chaos magicians and Coast to Coast AM are not reliable sources, nor are their conclusions based on anything like verifiable evidence. In many cases, they don’t even understand the history of their own claims, and when we add Redfern summarizing and repeating these speculations, we merely add another layer of garbling and confusion. Even the original interviews Redfern conducted are less than illuminating, talking to chaos magician Ian “Cat” Williams and “paranormal pastor” Robin Swope, neither of whom contribute anything of value not already in the published literature on the subject. Redfern has not quite mastered the idea, laid out decades ago by Lawrence E. Spivak, that interviews are most illuminating when the interviewer challenges the subject with opposing views.

In the end, the book boils down to a bunch of fantasists trying to parse the hairline differences between egregores, transdimensional entities, tulpas, thought-forms, and archetypes without ever once bothering to discern whether there is reason to attribute any reality to the Slender Man beyond the universal human tendency to displace acts of evil onto outside forces and ritually purify the perpetrators of their sins. No one involved wants to admit that preteen girls are less than innocent, and so a tulpa becomes a more reasonable explanation than the idea that children can harbor serious mental illnesses and even amorality or evil. ​

===================================================
"B_B"
PS:No Logo:
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Gd5150

Slender man tonight. Hell yeah.

He plays Hippy Hippy Shake and I posted that song (a different version though) a  few hours ago.  I wonder if Dave is reading Bellgab tonight?

zeebo

Quote from: Gd5150 on March 10, 2018, 12:24:16 AM
Slender man tonight. Hell yeah.

Good Friday-nite fare, that was.  I've got a soft spot for Redfern.  I don't care if it's slenderman, black-eyed kids, or chupacabras, I usually tune in when he's on.  He's kind of like LMH Lite.

Dateline

I really enjoy Dave Schrader, and he is one of my favorite weekend hosts.  Looking forward to actually tuning in.

Who is that weakday host that he filled in for last night. .. . lest I forget?  Dave Norry?

Uncle Duke

I'm not a big Redfern fan, but did enjoy the show overall.  Odd to hear someone discuss "torsion fields" without mention of an Accutron.  Also, as I listened to Dave almost plead with C2C regular caller Charles from Elgin, Tx to get to his point and ask a question, I finally figured out who that loon reminds me of.......Ted Kennedy.

ShayP

Quote from: zeebo on March 10, 2018, 04:24:16 PM
Good Friday-nite fare, that was.  I've got a soft spot for Redfern.  I don't care if it's slenderman, black-eyed kids, or chupacabras, I usually tune in when he's on.  He's kind of like LMH Lite.

I'm with ya zeebo.  I dig Redfern.  8)

ShayP

Quote from: Uncle Duke on March 10, 2018, 08:54:37 PM
  Also, as I listened to Dave almost plead with C2C regular caller Charles from Elgin, Tx to get to his point and ask a question, I finally figured out who that loon reminds me of.......Ted Kennedy.

LOL!!!  ;D

Gd5150

Zak Bagans on tonight. Lol!!! That’s can’t miss radio.

Quote“If this is the portal to hell, why don’t you come up out of that ground and get us!”

Quote from: Gd5150 on March 10, 2018, 11:42:42 PM
Zak Bagans on tonight. Lol!!! That’s can’t miss radio.

Just the first hour.  I definitely want to see the Demon House documentary.  I want to know what sort of bad stuff occurred to cause Zak to demolish it.

Not sure I'm up for the main guest.  I'm so burned out on aliens and the like.  Looks like he had a good guest yesterday on his podcast.  May listen to that instead.

It's Frightening Friday on BEYOND the DARKNESS & we find ourselves Between Love and Hate: The Devil is Real with guest John Eagan. A god fearing man, artist, musician is confronted with the supernatural - something that eventually exposes itself as Demonic. A man and his family suddenly find their beliefs tested and with terrifying confrontations. AND A NEW THEATER OF THE MIND! Get his book here: www.John-Eagan.com Start a 30-day trial of Audible and your first audiobook is free. Go to audible.com/btd or text btd to 500-500

https://www.podcastone.com/beyond-the-darkness

AvDaBr

Quote from: 21st Century Man on March 11, 2018, 01:07:37 AM
Just the first hour.  I definitely want to see the Demon House documentary.  I want to know what sort of bad stuff occurred to cause Zak to demolish it.

Not sure I'm up for the main guest.  I'm so burned out on aliens and the like.  Looks like he had a good guest yesterday on his podcast.  May listen to that instead.

Probably a good decision.  Energy medicine and consciousness "teachers" don't make for compelling ET talk in my opinion.  And this guest is validation of stated opinion.

Quote from: AvDaBr on March 11, 2018, 02:15:05 AM
Probably a good decision.  Energy medicine and consciousness "teachers" don't make for compelling ET talk in my opinion.  And this guest is validation of stated opinion.

I hate the bullshit consciousness guests most of all.

Gd5150

Quote from: 21st Century Man on March 11, 2018, 02:29:02 AM
I hate the bullshit consciousness guests most of all.

I decided to listen to Sasquatch Chronicles after Zak was done. Love a good skunk ape story.

Dr. MD MD

Quote from: 21st Century Man on March 11, 2018, 02:29:02 AM
I hate the bullshit consciousness guests most of all.

I've heard it done well before but the guests who do are usually PhD psychologists or something and not new age mystics.

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